I waited until the next morning to answer.
“Avery?” my father said the moment I picked up.
“Yes.”
“Your sister says you’re at Ashford Heights.”
“I am.”
“You transferred without telling us.”
I stood in the middle of the courtyard while students moved around me.
“I didn’t think you’d care,” I said.
A pause.
“Of course I care,” he said. “You’re my daughter.”
The sentence felt strange, almost misplaced.
“Am I?” I asked softly.
He did not answer.
“You told me I wasn’t worth investing in,” I said. “I remember it clearly.”
“That was years ago.”
“I know,” I replied. “It still mattered.”
He exhaled slowly. “How are you paying for Ashford Heights?”
“Sterling Scholars.”
Another silence, longer this time.
“That’s extremely competitive.”
“Yes.”
“And you won it?”
The disbelief in his voice would have hurt once. At that moment, it barely touched me.
“Yes.”
Eventually he said, “We should talk in person. Your mother and I will be at graduation for Sadie anyway.”
Even then, he assumed the day belonged entirely to her.
“I’ll see you there,” I said, and ended the call.
The months before graduation passed quickly. Honors meetings. Faculty reviews. Speech planning. And then one afternoon my academic coordinator handed me an envelope.
Inside was the formal confirmation.
Valedictorian.
I read the word again and again.